From the daily archives:

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Up The Yangtze
Editor’s Note: Doc Soup is a monthly doc­u­mentary screening pro­gramme run by the good folks at Hot Docs. It gives audi­ences in Toronto (and now Calgary and Vancouver!) their reg­ular doc fix each year from the fall through to the spring, leading up to the Hot Docs fest­ival itself.

Up The Yangtze (2007, Director: Yung Chang): Set against the ongoing devel­op­ment of the Three Gorges Dam, Up The Yangtze is an intimate film about the momentous forces chan­ging modern China. Director Yung Chang, born near Toronto and now a Montreal native, trav­elled to China in 2002 with his grand­father, who wanted to show him the great river he’d been telling stories about for years. They took one of the “Farewell” cruises which are designed to show tour­ists the land­scape before it is flooded by the dam pro­ject. After this sur­real exper­i­ence, Chang knew he had to make a film. Though there are some hints of the film about tourism that he ori­gin­ally envi­sioned, he wisely focuses on the people being dir­ectly affected by this enormous public works pro­ject. China itself some­times seems to be one giant con­struc­tion site, and the growth of cities has led to an ever-growing hunger for the elec­tri­city to power them. Though dam­ming the Yangtze was a dream ori­gin­ated by Mao, it wasn’t until the late 1990s when the pro­ject began to come to fruition. The result has been a massive forced relo­ca­tion of more than two mil­lion people, as the rising water levels flood many villages.

Chang found the sub­jects of the film during the reg­ular recruiting ses­sions held by the cruise line. Chen Bo Yu is quickly christened “Jerry” for his inter­ac­tions with Western tour­ists. He’s 19 and an only child of rather well-off par­ents. Typical of the sons of China’s one-child policy, he’s a “little emperor”, arrogant and self-centered, used to get­ting his way. He takes the job in order to make as much money as pos­sible, and at one point boasts that he’s making more than his par­ents. But he doesn’t sur­vive the three-month pro­ba­tion, pos­sibly as a result of an alleg­a­tion that he shook down some tour­ists for “per­sonal tips”.

Yu Shui, on the other hand, needs this job des­per­ately, to sup­port her family. Although only just out of middle school, her sub­sist­ence farmer par­ents can’t afford the fees to send her to high school, and sug­gest she get a job. They’re also keenly aware that their ram­shackle hut by the river, with its veget­able garden, will soon be swal­lowed up and they’ll have to find paying work. Quickly dubbed “Cindy” by her employers, she struggles to over­come her shy­ness and the obvious class dif­fer­ences between her and the other employees. Her English skills aren’t as well-developed as her employers would like, so she starts her working life washing dishes in the kit­chen. For someone whose ambi­tion is to attend uni­ver­sity and become a sci­entist, this humi­li­ation, along with her home­sick­ness, is dif­fi­cult to take. But she makes a few friends along with her salary, and soon we wonder if she’ll return home at all.

Her par­ents had agon­ized about sending her off to work, and are clearly uncom­fort­able having to exploit her in this way. But her father also wants her to see the world, even if that just means the rest of the river, and at their first reunion, her par­ents’ pride is evident. But so is Yu Shui’s embar­rass­ment. Part of it is the typ­ical teenager’s feel­ings about her par­ents, but it’s also clear that she’s dif­ferent from the other young people working on the ship. When her boss invites them aboard for a tour, it’s almost excru­ci­ating to watch. But you also get the feeling that she’s going to be ok in this new future, while her par­ents will con­tinue to struggle.

It’s clear that China’s renewal is unstop­pable, but that it is also pro­ceeding without much pity for the rural pop­u­la­tion. In one scene, a shop owner tear­fully pours out a tale of beat­ings and forced relo­ca­tion as a statue of Mao sits benignly behind him. I wonder what Mao would think about a country still offi­cially com­mitted to Communism rolling over the very people it pro­fesses to revere. There is a time-lapse scene near the end of the film where we watch the rising water claim Yu Shui’s family’s beloved riverbank shack, and it word­lessly drives home the utter indif­fer­ence of “pro­gress” to the most vul­ner­able people caught up in it. Much like Jennifer Baichwal’s film Manufactured Landscapes (and the Edward Burtynsky pho­to­graphs it is based upon), Up The Yangtze is a his­tor­ical doc­u­ment of a time and place that will not exist for long.

Cindy's family

Official site
Donation site where you can help Yu Shui/Cindy’s family

UPDATE: The film opens the­at­ric­ally in Toronto on Friday February 8 at the Cumberland cinema. I sug­gest you catch it on the opening weekend since there’s no guar­antee how long the run will last. Seeing it on a big screen really does make a difference.

9/10(9/10)

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